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Coco

Tue Nov 12 2013 20:42:17 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

History of the Pebble Beach road race.

Coco

Thu Oct 31 2013 21:37:02 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Classic-car aficionado and Mullin Automotive Museum founder Peter Mullin in his 1934 Voisin C25 Aerodyne at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in 2011.

Coco

Thu Oct 17 2013 15:30:21 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Poster art for the 37th Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance August 23rd 1987

Artwork by: Ken Eberts

Coco

Sun Oct 13 2013 21:26:17 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Our first Pebble poster:)

Coco

Fri Oct 11 2013 10:11:50 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Sandra Button is chairman of the California-based Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance, the most prestigious vintage-car event in the U.S. She discusses her favorite automobile, as told to A.J. Baime:

I can't remember a time when I wasn't interested in cars. I have always loved old cars and old-car people. What's not to like? There's history, and you get to go places.

There's no escaping the fact that the car world is a man's world. I was 6 feet tall at 11 years old, so I guess I've always hung out with the guys. It's been over 10 years since I became chairman of the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance, the oldest continuously running classic car competition in the world. People are always asking me: Which car is your favorite?

When I married my husband, he owned a 1937 Jaguar SS100, so it became ours. It's a quintessential English sports car. It's well-mannered. It does exactly what you ask of it. It has enough power and it has real brakes, so it stops when you want it to. It's a tight little car; you almost feel like you're wearing it as you drive it.

The thing about the SS100 is: We've had so many adventures together—times with friends, times on the road and times on the side of the road. This car has taken us all over England, through the Swiss and Italian Alps into Venice, Budapest and Prague and all the places in between, through Patagonia in Argentina. I can close my eyes and see all these great places we've been with this car. It's the same age as my mother, and it feels like an old friend, a trusted steed.

Coco

Thu Oct 10 2013 00:23:30 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

On a recent fall morning, business is buzzing at the automotive candy shop that is Canepa Design. Over here, a Ferrari Daytona is having work done on its carbs, over there a vintage Mercedes Benz Gullwing is being stripped of paint. But sandwiched between other familiar sports cars -- a pair of Porsche 356s and a Shelby GT350 -- is a rare bird of a far different feather: The first passenger car to ever wear the name Duesenberg, an important piece of automotive history.

Dave Stoltz, Canepa's one-man restoration crew on this project of a lifetime, is hard at work on this doozy of a car, a 1921 Duesenberg Model A road-rocket that has been in the Castle family -- Hawaiian missionaries turned land and produce magnates -- since new and is being revived by California descendent Jimmy Castle. The car is the first production model of the storied racing-focused brand that later became synonymous with four-wheeled opulence. These visions of American luxury were driven by everyone from Al Capone to William Randolph Hearst, and custom-outfitted cost as much as $25,000 at a time when doctors earned around $3,000 a year.

Canepa Design's mission is to present this one-off car at the 2013 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance, just down Highway One from its Scotts Valley, Calif., headquarters. Although in its present state the car looks humble, restored it could well make a 1962 Ferrari GTO that recently traded hands for $35 million look like a cheap date.

"It's like a Honus Wagner baseball card," says Jay Leno
"Duesenbergs routinely fetch eight figures, so for this one, the very first production car that's stayed in the same family, the price could well be more than $50 million," says Canepa spokesman John Ficarra, who adds that the restoration alone will cost more than a million, most of it in labor as Stoltz sets about either restoring or manufacturing myriad pieces using as a roadmap just four photos of the car in its heyday.

Not that the car's ultimate asking price matters. Castle doesn't appear to be selling. Duesenberg collector and comedian Jay Leno tried to buy the car a few years back but was politely rebuffed. He remains intrigued by the seminal machine.

"The Duesenberg brothers built racing cars, which eventually gave way to making a few production cars," Leno explains. "This car had a straight 8 (cylinder) engine, which was fairly new at the time, and hydraulic brakes. It was big, heavy and reliable. The first of anything is always significant. It's like a Honus Wagner baseball card. And some cars these days really are moving into the realm of kinetic artwork, investments that aren't unlike buying an early (Marc) Chagall or a Picasso."

What makes this car unique is that despite its massive size it was, relatively speaking, a spry coupe in its day, says Randy Ema, one of the nation's foremost Duesenberg experts who owns what's left of the manufacturer's records and blueprints and has provided some assistance on the restoration.

"The car could hit 80 mph and rev up to 4,000 rpm, which was really unheard of back then," says Ema. "It was a light, nimble little car when compared to a Packard or Lincoln. It also cost $9,000 when a Ford cost around $280. But what makes this model so special is it's the first and only remaining original-owner car."

While this particular Duesenberg isn't accompanied by much documentation save vintage photos, "Fred Roe's book on Duesenberg indicates that it was built and sold before the end of 1921 and that the original owner's assertion that it was the first car sold is probably correct," says Jon Bill, archivist at the Auburn Cord Automobile Museum in Auburn, Ind. (Auburn Automobiles owner E.L. Cord bought Duesenberg in 1926.)


Dave Stoltz, the Duesy's lone restorer, works on a brass headlight

The first thing that strikes you about the car is the size of its two-passenger cabin, which is framed in wood. The oversized dimensions stem from its first owner's massive size, said to be some seven feet tall and three hundred pounds. But changing that seat position is likely the only thing Stoltz will mess with on this car; his mandate is to spare no expense to make the car look like it did the day it left the Duesenberg factory.

"Not long after the first owner bought the car he shipped it to Hawaii, where the lava roads and farm life were very taxing," says Stoltz. "So he eventually shipped it back to the factory, and they beefed things up a lot, all of which we are getting rid of. I now have these four (original) photos ingrained in my head, and I've been making new parts as we go along."

This rebuild is as complete as they come. Time and the ocean's salt air ate away a good deal of the car's aluminum and steel, and the deterioration was exacerbated by decades of storage in Hawaii and California. So far, Stoltz has hand-fabricated bumpers, parts of fenders, an intricate luggage rack, a brass gas cap, and headlight stands - a part you can barely see once the British-made brass headlamps take up residence on top of them. Stoltz pulls off the stands, two pieces of flowing sculpture that he says could be made using computer technology for around $7,000 but which he crafted from molds for $5,000.

"Besides the cheaper price, I liked the fact that they wouldn't be totally perfect, because no one back in 1921 was using computers to make anything," snickers the pony-tailed Stoltz, whose recently helped restore a 1959 Ferrari Testarossa to its former glory. "This is definitely a dream job for me. This Duesy is like a ghost car, because no one has seen it for years. But in the end a car's a car. If you're willing to put in the hours researching, scouring the Web looking for parts, making parts, starting from scratch when you have to, then anything is possible."

At present, the body of this 1921 Duesenberg is waiting to be joined by its suspension and engine, the latter being worked on by fabled Ed Pink Racing Engines in Los Angeles. We'll be back with more as the car comes together.

Coco

Fri Oct 04 2013 11:12:55 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

The 2013 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance – Simplex Automobiles – Steve Natale Photography: This 1911 Simplex 50 h.p. Holbrook Toy Tonneau, owned by Ray Scherr, went on to win 1st in class at the Concours. We have a post filled with many photos be Steve Natale and full information all about these legendary cars @ http://theoldmotor.com/?p=96521

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 16:44:11 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Judge it all you want, but Jay says Nay.....

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 13:47:10 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 13:51:18 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 13:52:45 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 13:54:56 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 14:08:12 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

Coco

Thu Oct 03 2013 14:12:28 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

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